| Literature DB >> 17468930 |
L P van Minnen1, M Blom, H M Timmerman, M R Visser, H G Gooszen, L M A Akkermans.
Abstract
Infection of pancreatic necrosis with intestinal flora is accepted to be a main predictor of outcome during severe acute pancreatitis. Bacterial translocation is the process whereby luminal bacteria migrate to extraintestinal sites. Animal models were proven indispensable in detecting three major aspects of bacterial translocation: small bowel bacterial overgrowth, mucosal barrier failure, and disturbed immune responses. Despite the progress made in the knowledge of bacterial translocation, the exact mechanism, origin and route of bacteria, and the optimal prophylactic and treatment strategies remain unclear. Methodological restrictions of animal models are likely to be the cause of this uncertainty. A literature review of animal models used to study bacterial translocation during acute pancreatitis demonstrates that many experimental techniques per se interfere with intestinal flora, mucosal barrier function, or immune response. Interference with these major aspects of bacterial translocation complicates interpretation of study results. This paper addresses these and other issues of animal models most frequently used to study bacterial translocation during acute pancreatitis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17468930 PMCID: PMC1915599 DOI: 10.1007/s11605-007-0088-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gastrointest Surg ISSN: 1091-255X Impact factor: 3.452
Characteristics of Several Animal Models of Acute Pancreatitis
| Model | Animal Species | Pancreatic Necrosis | Pancreatic Infection | Mortality | Invasiveness |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duodenal loop | Rat | No | Considerable | High | Laparotomy |
| Choline-deficient diet | Mouse | Yes | Little | High | Minimal |
| Duct ligation | Rat/opossum | No/Yes | Little | Low | Laparotomy |
| Cerulein | Mouse/rat | Yes/No | Little | Low | Minimal |
| Duct perfusion | Rat/dog/pig | Yes | Considerable | Moderate to high | Laparotomy |
| Duct perfusion + cerulein | Rat | Yes | Considerable | Moderate | Laparotomy |
Aspects of Bacterial Translocation and Potential Confounding Factors of Animal Models
| Aspect | Confounding Factor | Model |
|---|---|---|
| Intestinal motility and flora | Animal species | Potentially all models |
| Housing conditions (SPF) | Potentially all models | |
| Diet | CDE diet | |
| Analgesics | Invasive models | |
| Laparotomy | Invasive models | |
| Bile flow | Duct ligation | |
| Cerulein | Cerulein models | |
| Intestinal manipulation | Invasive models | |
| Mucosal barrier function | Stress | Potentially all models |
| Diet | CDE diet | |
| Anesthetics | Invasive models | |
| Pancreatic proteases | Duct ligation | |
| Intestinal manipulation/puncture | Duct perfusion | |
| Immune system | Stress | Potentially all models |
| Diet | CDE diet | |
| Disease course/severity | Species-dependent | |
| Obstructive jaundice | Duct ligation, duodenal loop | |
| Intestinal manipulation | Invasive models |